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Ukraine soldier and flag

Monday, June 26, 2023, 7:00 PM
While the Biden administration tends to perceive the world as being divided between two great power blocs, with the U.S. and its allies on one side and a nefarious alliance of China, Russia, Iran, and North Korea on the other, most of the world sees a more complex picture, with multiple centers of power and complex, fluid arrangements among the major players. This is evident in the world's response to the war in Ukraine. The Ukraine War has crystalized forces that have been building for years, crystalizing a new multipolar world.

While many in Washington believe that the entire world, minus those four bad actors, supports Western-backed efforts to ensure a decisive Ukrainian victory over Russia, most Global South leaders have avoided taking sides in the war and prefer an early negotiated settlement. What they see emerging is a multipolar world, in which the U.S., the EU, China, Russia, India, and other countries exercise significant global power and influence, along with regional powers like Turkey, Brazil, Indonesia, and South Africa.

In this new era, addressing global problems like climate change, pandemics, and major wars like that in Ukraine will require coordination and cooperation among several of these power centers, not just two.

Questions to be addressed by our distinguished panelists Helena Cobban, Joseph Camilleri, and Michael Klare include:

- What does the emerging, multipolar world order look like?

- How will its emergence affect the outcome of the war in Ukraine?

- How will it affect U.S.-China relations and other global stresses?  

Massachusetts Peace Action.  

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